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Monday, October 19, 2015

Color Identity and Self-Identification: The Case of Raven-Symone

Raven-Symone Pearman has angered many
African-Americans regarding her identity utterances. Even her father wrote a
letter in support of his daughter while acknowledging that she can say some
dumb statements sometimes. However, looking at some of the responses to Raven-Symone, I realized that some comments
revealed some ignorance regarding the identity of Africans and people of African
descent in Europe and in the Americas. Below are two of her quotes.

﻿

Raven-Symone - Courtesy: USmagazine.com

"I’m tired of being labeled. I’m an American. I’m not an African-American; I’m an American.” - Raven-Symone

I never said I wasn’t Black. I said I wasn’t African American. To me, that’s a difference. Thank you to Ancestry.com, actually, for sending me my DNA test. I am from every continent in Africa, except for one. And I am from every continent in Europe, except for one. And for the last 400 years, my family has been living in Virginia. How long do you have to be in one country before you’re that?” - Raven-symone

There has always been, and continue to be, a huge identity crisis
that’s never been solved or fixed into a given humane paradigm. Paul Gilroy’s 1993 book, The Black Atlantic, confused the identity crisis issue even more. Gilroy
detaches the descendants of African slaves from Africa and argues for a
‘hybrid’ form of identity that makes use of cultural elements from Africa and
the 'west.' Despite his call for his hybridized view of identity, Gilroy however, played down any rootedness or a strong sense of
Africanness.

People of African descent in
the US, especially descendants of African slaves, have never had a fixed,
univocal identity. Even worse, their identity has always been something decided
for them by others, especially European-American scholars. Even renowned
‘Black’ scholars like Louis Gates, Cornell West, James Baldwin, Frantz Fanon,
W. E. B Du Bois, Paul Gilroy, among others, struggled and continue to struggle
with the issue of identity. To single out Raven-Symone without critically looking at
the general context that informs her ‘ignorant’ utterances is actually
ignorant in itself.

The descendants of African slaves
in the Americas were not only commoditized but also dehumanized and anything
that gave them a sense of humanity taken away. Slave traders and slave masters knew
the importance of culture, religion and organic identity so they made sure
anything that connected slaves to Africa was removed. Sociologists call that
‘cultural or social death.’All people
of African descent in the Americas were killed socially and some of them are now trying to rise from that death.

This social death continues to dog
these people to the present. Touré in his book , Who's Afriad of Post-Blackness and Gates in Thirteen
Ways of Looking at a Blackman, exemplify this identity crisis. Some of the
people they interviewed in their books had this sense of confused identity
regarding who they are. Gates, interviewed by Touré, argued that there are as many
ways of being black as there are African-Americans. In other words, there are
30 million ways of being black. Some people interviewed by Gates saw being called
‘Black’ as limiting them. I am a human being who happen to be black, some
would say.

This underscores one thing. Raven-Symone isn't alone! While
some people would see their response as a rejection of self, we have to remember that
what they are rejecting isn’t themselves but a sense of identity, rooted in
superficiality of color: Black. They are rejecting what Europeans
and EuropeansAmericans said they are and should be. You can’t have intellectual
and social power if who you are is someone else’s fancy. Black, Nigger, Negro,
Colored weren’t term meant to praise the African Personhood. They were all meant
to devalue and denigrate her. She had to accept them because she had no power
to self-determine, to be self-determinant as sociologists say. This is where I have to remind Ms. Pearman about saying she's 'Black' and not 'African-American.' She's called 'Black' because of her connection with 'Africa' not her connection with Europe!

When, I, who has a very dark skin
pigmentation is classified in the same color identity as Colin Powell (Who looks
more European), then you know something is wrong. Colin Powell is closer to
George Clooney color-wise than to me, however, Colin and I are described and classified as ‘Black men.” And Colin, lacking the capacity both personally and racially to define
himself, simply accept that he is a ‘Black man.” Sudanese president, Omar el Beshir,
who’s darker than Colin Powell, is called an 'Arab' and Powell is 'Black'. What connects me
with Colin isn’t ‘Blackness’ but Africa. The only commonality I have with Colin
is Africanness not blackness. It is really Stupid or Childish to think that Colin is ‘Black.’ He’s
'black' only because of his inability to define himself and by what Europeans and Europe-Americans want him to be. He has some Africanness in him and that piece of Africanness makes him unsuitable in the greatness of Europeanness, supposedly. And we still think the 18th/19th 'Racial Purity' is gone!

So if people like Raven-Symone
try to define themselves, what we need to do is ask them to put their dissent
into context in order not to be misunderstood. Ms. Pearman isn’t rejecting herself
nor does she think it’s bad to be someone of African descent. What she’s
rejecting is a condition she’s been placed in: Being called 'African-American.' She’s rejecting what she feels is an imposed
identity; something educated African-Americans have not been able to do sufficiently. I disagree with Raven-Symone as she needs to understand that being called African-American is more respectful than being called 'Black.' If you don't want to judged by the color of your skin then don't make the color of your skin your identity.Gates,
in his interview with Touré and in ‘Thirteen
Ways of Looking at a Black Man’ sounds really defeated an incapable of defining anything about identity as a scholar. He just fits himself into the presented Eurocentric status quo
availed by his European-American scholars. The only difference between Raven-Symone
and the rest of us is that she’s been able to naively say that out loud on national TV. The
rest feel this sense of resentment towards European-originated color-codification of
people or even against being called African-American. Educated folks go with 'African-American' but less educated folks go with 'Black.'However, to reduce the richness of people's culture, tradition and values to a mere color is not only to devalue their humanity, but to also see them as of less significance. This is a problem that has always dogged African-Americans. Jesse Jackon's first public use of the term African-American is an example of an identity that originates from the people and also presents them not as mere color but as people with cultural origin. Raven-Symone needs to remember this.What Raven-Symone wanted to do is to detach herself from anything 'African.' She believes she's been in America long enough to be an 'American.' What she needs to remember is 'what kind of African?" Italian-American, British-American, German-America...? Even people like Ms. Golberg of 'The View' once said she doesn't want to be hypernated. But who's not hypernated in America? Identity crisis is not Raven-Symone's fault. it's America's fault! Ms. Golberg and Ms. Pearman need to remember that they are 'black' because of their connection with 'Africa.'

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ANGELINA & ADUT ( A Novel)

Leadership, given what is happening now in South Sudan, and generally in Africa, fascinates me. And it fascinates me not in a good way but because of the sociopolitical and socioeconomic ills facing the African continent and most of the so-called 'Third World.' To me, South Sudan, now, is a classic case.Rebellion by disaffected politico-military leaders and repression by the government of South Sudan in Juba have stunted institutional development and leadership growth. This has made service provision almost irrelevant as political survival has taken primacy and supremacy. CLICK HERE TO READ MORE

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As someone who grew up in war conditions and lived as a refugee for a long time, I'm sometimes considered by many people in the 'west' to be prone to (or have) low self-esteem, be poor or illiterate. Living as refugees or displaced persons, who depended on the good will of others put people in a situation where they don't think much about themselves. But that's not everyone though.

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